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Moving through grief by leaving a legacy Carol Kummet, LICSW, MTS UWMC Palliative Care Social Worker THE LAST GIFT.

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Presentation on theme: "Moving through grief by leaving a legacy Carol Kummet, LICSW, MTS UWMC Palliative Care Social Worker THE LAST GIFT."— Presentation transcript:

1 Moving through grief by leaving a legacy Carol Kummet, LICSW, MTS UWMC Palliative Care Social Worker THE LAST GIFT

2 What transforms the merely sad into something tragic and therefore beautiful, and therefore saving, and therefore, in some odd way, joyful is the telling of the story. It’s what makes us human beings. -James Carroll

3 How to assist someone through grief

4 William Worden’s 4 Tasks of Grief  Acknowledge the reality of the loss

5 William Worden’s 4 Tasks of Grief  Acknowledge the reality of the loss  Experience the pain

6 William Worden’s 4 Tasks of Grief  Acknowledge the reality of the loss  Experience the pain  Adjust to an environment in which the deceased is missing

7 William Worden’s 4 Tasks of Grief  Acknowledge the reality of the loss  Experience the pain  Adjust to an environment in which the deceased is missing  Reinvest emotional energy and remember the relationship

8 This is not the end of joy. Grieving is bits of many things, memories, regrets, reminders – each of which bears its own special weight in our burden of sorrow………A day will come when there will be more bits of healing then of grieving and reasons for joy will begin to pile up in the freshly swept rooms of our lives. Molly Fumia

9 Legacy work is the gift of sharing your wisdom and experiences This final gift shares your stories, the reasons you lived as you did, your beliefs and understandings, who inspired you, your values and priorities. Legacies share your feelings and thoughts. The dying person benefits from reviewing their life and sharing those life lessons with their loved ones.

10 Legacy work is the gift of remembering The dying person can support their family and friends as they grieve by leaving a legacy. Legacies offer to the bereaved a tangible way to remember the deceased. (Grief task #4) It might inspire the bereaved to begin to be attentive to their own legacy as well. Am I living a life true to my beliefs? Am I living a life of joy and meaning?

11 Legacy affirms our connections and love Legacy work courageously seeks reconciliation where needed and affirms the importance of relationships in life.

12 “The handbook on dying that the hospice gave us advise you to forgive the dying person and express your love and your gratitude, and to say goodbye. It doesn’t explain how to do this with someone who is extremely hard of hearing and who, even when he could hear, never went in for such declarations............I was three when my father wrote a letter to me and my brother and sister in 1945 saying how much he missed us while he was in the Army…..It was signed, ‘Love, Daddy.” I never saw the letter until a week ago. It never occurred to me that he loved me, but of course he did, and it was nice to hear it at last.” Garrison Kiellor

13 Many creative ways to give the final gift …  Video taping  Audio taping  Writing letters  Ethical wills  A list affirming loved one’s qualities (I love your sense of humor)  Interview each other on the story of your life  Simply tell stories of past times or share remembrances  Compose a photo album of treasured times together  Parents can share with adult children what qualities they saw in them from a young age

14 What transforms the merely sad into something tragic and therefore beautiful, and therefore saving, and therefore, in some odd way, joyful is the telling of the story. It’s what makes us human beings. -James Carroll

15 Love Sonnet by Pablo Neruda When I die, I want your hands on my eyes; I want the light and the wheat of your beloved hands to pass their freshness over me once more; I want to feel the softness that changed my destiny. I want you to live while I wait for you. I want your ears still to hear the wind, I want you to sniff the sea’s aroma that we love together, to continue to walk on the sand we walk on. I want what I love to continue to live, and you whom I love and sang above everything else to continue to flourish, full-flowered; so that you can reach everything my love directs you to, so that my shadow can travel along in your hair, so that everything can learn the reason for my song.


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